Queer Callings

FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781531504540

Untimely Notes on Names and Desires

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Sale price$46.99


By Mark D. Jordan
Imprint: FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
203 x 127 mm
Weight:

Pages:
176

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Description

Mark Jordan is R. R. Niebuhr Research Professor at Harvard Divinity School. His recent books include Recruiting Young Love: How Christians Talk about Homosexuality and Convulsing Bodies: Religion and Resistance in Foucault. He is also author of the groundbreaking work The Invention of Sodomy in Christian Theology.

Prologue: Our Names, Our Destinies! 1 Linguistic Orientations 21 Part I: Identifying Selves 1 A Quarrel of Queer Glossaries 41 2 Inventions of Identity 68 Interlude with Exercises: How We Talk Now 87 3 Identities at Prayer 102 Part II: Recalling Spirits 4 Ancestral Prophecies, Future Myths 119 5 Other Regimens of Bodies and Pleasures 139 6 Pulp Poetics 157 7 Sex Beyond 177 Epilogue: The Impossibility of Being E(a)rnest 195 Acknowledgments 203 Notes 205 Index 223

. . . [P]rofoundly insightful and beautifully written. Highly recommended.-- "Choice Reviews" A lively and incisive historicized linguistic study of how the habit of naming ourselves after sex/gender has been built up and cemented, Queer Callings is an expertly alert and finely textured investigation of the archives of queer speech.---Richard Rambuss, author of Closet Devotions and Kubrick's Men Capacious in its literary engagements and in its persistence in linking philosophical and literary interventions with time-honored theological perspectives, Queer Callings draws together in a new pattern the threads of Christian theological history and Foucauldian genealogical analysis that have made Mark Jordan a luminary.---Melissa M. Wilcox, author of Queer Nuns: Religion, Activism, and Serious Parody In this profound and profoundly intelligent book, Mark D. Jordan probes the protocols as well as the frequently violent debates that surround queer names and naming: the names we call ourselves, the names we are called by others. Along the way, Queer Callings not only defamiliarizes current ways of naming sexual and gender identities; it also loosens the grip of the very imperative to catalogue and name our identities in the first place, indeed, as our first place if we are to be at all. Jordan does so in order to open up wider and wilder and more lushly habitable ways of being and becoming and desiring. Lyrically argued and gloriously felt, Queer Callings is a gift of possibility.---Ann Pellegrini, coauthor of Gender Without Identity

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